This is to voice your opinion and what you think of the current affairs.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Irish Loyola alumna receives prestigious writing award

Loyola press release - June 29, 2009
Claire Keegan, a 1992 Loyola University New Orleans College of Arts and Sciences graduate, was awarded the 2009
Davy Byrnes Irish Writing Award and €25,000, approximately $40,000, on Monday, June 22. The award, honoring the long-standing tradition of short story writing in Ireland, was bestowed at the Davy Byrnes Gourmet Pub and Restaurant in Dublin, a favorite hangout of Irish writer James Joyce.
Keegan’s winning short story, “Foster,” was chosen from a pool of 800 entries by American fiction writer Richard Ford. Caroline Walsh, literary editor of The Irish Times, presented the award.
“‘Foster’ is a child’s rapt and eloquent vision of life-in-tumult between two families,” said Ford. “In lifting a homely rural life to our moral notice, the story exhibits a patient attention to life’s vast consequence and finality, and does so through a lavish, discriminating appetite for language and its profound capacity to return us to life renewed.”
Keegan was raised on a farm in Wicklow, Ireland. She completed her undergraduate studies in English and politics at Loyola, and subsequently earned a Master of Arts degree in writing from the University of Wales at Cardiff, and a Master of Philosophy degree from Trinity College, Dublin.
“Foster” is not the first of Keegan’s stories to win acclaim. “Antarctica,” was a Los Angeles Times Book of the Year and earned her the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, and “Walk the Blue Fields” won the Edge Hill Prize. Keegan is a member of
Aosdána, a 240-person council formed to honor artists whose work has made an outstanding contribution to the arts in Ireland. She now lives on Ireland’s Wexford coast.
For more information, contact Sean Snyder in Loyola’s Office of Public Affairs at
smsnyder

How to Make an Islamic Democracy

Raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, but born in Tehran, Reza Aslan, the Muslim author of this book, grew accustomed to feeling like the odd man out, especially after the events of Sept. 11, 2001. "Are you with us or with them?" people asked. "Which is it? Time to decide. There is no middle."
But for Aslan, whose coolly detached writing style suits his subject well, there clearly was a middle way, one that did not involve him picking sides in a war that could never be won in the first place. In his view, the jihadists who attacked the United States were fighting "a cosmic war," one that provided "an invitation that a great many Americans were more than willing to accept."
Aslan argues that a cosmic war is distinct from a holy war, which pits rival religious groups against each other in an earthly battle: "A cosmic war is like a ritual drama in which participants act out on earth a battle they believe is actually taking place in the heavens." For Aslan, the moment President George W. Bush went on television and either intentionally or through clumsiness framed "the war on terrorism" in terms of "this crusade," he fell into a well-laid trap. "He responded with precisely the cosmic dualism that those who carried out the attacks had intended to provoke," Aslan writes, before reminding us that the idea of the United States as a cosmic force dates back to the Founding Fathers, who "drew up a seal that depicted Moses on the shores of the Sea of Reeds, his staff raised, the waters surging over Pharaoh's army."
But Aslan's new book -- his second, after the bestselling "No God but God," about the origins and evolution of Islam -- provides more than just historical precedent; it also offers a very persuasive argument for the best way to counter jihadism and its many splinter groups, such as al-Qaeda. "Islamism," Aslan says, "can act as a foil to Jihadism. Unlike Jihadists, whose aims and aspirations rest on a cosmic plane, Islamists have material goals and legitimate ambitions that can be addressed by the state." He defines Islamism as a "nationalist ideology" based on religion, distinct from jihadism, which wants to "erase all borders" and aspires to "an idealized past of religious communalism."
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He cites Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province, where democratic elections between hard-core parties and the moderate Awami National Party resulted in a rout by the ANP and adds that "throughout the Middle East, whenever moderate Islamist parties have been allowed to participate in the political process, popular support for more extremist groups has diminished." This was certainly true in Iran earlier this month, when the independent presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi won a substantial number of votes by stressing his reformist credentials, not his Shi'ite beliefs.
Aslan credits Bush for promising to promote democratic elections in the Middle East, then lambastes him for not following through on that promise: "By refusing to engage the democratically elected leaders in Lebanon and Palestine, and by looking the other way as its allies in Jordan, Egypt, Morocco and Saudi Arabia reverted to their despotic behavior, the United States was telling the world that the promise of peaceful political reform through democratic participation was a lie."
Aslan's regret is all the more profound because he believes that his adoptive country's domestic commitment "to the freedom of religion and religious expression" is second to none and has enabled it to resist the pull of jihadism on its citizens far better than its European counterparts. "I have watched Muslims chant 'Death to America!' on the streets of Tehran, then privately beg me to help them get a visa to the United States." Indeed, Aslan is no armchair philosopher, and the abiding pleasure of this book is how he deftly describes his peregrinations. From the chaotic splendor of Jerusalem to the downright penury of Gaza, to the mean streets of Beeston in northwest England, where the so-called 7/7 London bombers grew up, to the crowded cafes of Cairo, he appears equally at home.
This he proudly acknowledges: "My citizenship is American, my nationality, Iranian; my ethnicity, Persian; my culture, Middle Eastern; my religion, Muslim." And after eight years of "us versus them," President Barack Obama's victory speech provided Aslan with a perfect epilogue: " 'If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible, who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer.' "
Tobias Grey is a freelance journalist and literary critic living in Paris

Iran's Second Islamic Revolution?

Last week, Ali Gharib made the important point that what's happening in Iran is thus far not a rejection of the Islamic republic, but a struggle over its founding principles. Reviewing Moussavi's formal statement Saturday, Gary Sick described it as diagnosis of "a revolution gone wrong," writing that Moussavi has "issued a manifesto for a new vision of the Islamic republic."In an especially good post, Spencer Ackerman flagged a key passage from Moussavi's statement:
"If the large volume of cheating and vote rigging, which has set fire to the hays of people's anger, is expressed as the evidence of fairness, the republican nature of the state will be killed and in practice, the ideology that Islam and Republicanism are incompatible will be proven.""This outcome will make two groups happy: One, those who since the beginning of revolution stood against Imam and called the Islamic state a dictatorship of the elite who want to take people to heaven by force; and the other, those who in defending the human rights, consider religion and Islam against republicanism."As Spencer notes, that last bit is a pretty clear rebuke to those Western critics who, in criticizing the brutality of the Iranian regime, have tried to present Islam and democracy as irreconcilable.Speaking of which, conservative scholar-activist Martin Kramer, in a comically mendacious (and, as usual, Rashid Khalidi-obsessed) dispatch, tries to argue that the "events in Iran have left Obama's simplistic mental map of the Middle East, first learned from a few Palestinian activists and an old Hyde Park rabbi, in shreds."But, in fact, what is in shreds is the representation of Islamism -- peddled for years by Kramer, Daniel Pipes, and ideologically affiliated think tanks and publications -- as wholly and irretrievably hostile to modernity, to human rights, and to democracy. Having spent years vilifying the Islamist discourse of struggle and sacrifice as deployed by Iran, Hamas and Hezbollah, these pundits have now been pantsed by the Iranian demonstrators deploying the very same discourse on behalf of freedom and reform. Moussavi has declared himself "ready for martyrdom" -- will conservatives now condemn his "death cult"?Even in the best outcome, it is likely that the Iranian government will continue to be, in key respects, Islamist-controlled (matching the Islamist-controlled government in neighboring Iraq.) But it's important to understand that this, much more so than any Western-implanted concept of "secularism," has the potential to really spur the already vigorous debate in the region over the arrangement of a fair and just society, by underscoring Islamism's contribution to that debate. As with President Obama's wise caution in regard to the demonstrations, the most productive thing the U.S. do, while continuing to voice support for human rights, is to get out of the way and make space for the debate to occur.


By Matthew Duss and Lawrence Korb

LAPD appoints first Muslim chaplain

LOS ANGELES, June 30 (UPI) --

The Los Angeles Police Department, hoping to improve relations with Muslims, has appointed the force's first Islamic chaplain, police officials said.
Pakistan-born Sheik Qazi Asad, 47, will become a reserve chaplain at the North Hollywood station, the Los Angeles Times reported Monday.
"We need to establish very good communication ... where both parties are talking to each other," Asad told the Times. "This is just opening up the door."
Asad, a U.S. citizen, has spent a decade working to improve relations between police and Muslim communities in Los Angeles County.
The LAPD hopes he'll strengthen relations that have suffered since the department tried to map the city's Muslim population in 2007, the newspaper said. The department abandoned the plan after critics called it religious profiling.
Asad has served as a member of the sheriff's Executive Clergy Council, on which he worked to build trust between Muslims and police.
"Officers don't know about Islam or Muslim communities in Los Angeles," Lt. Mark Stainbrook, who oversees community outreach for the department's counter-terrorism and criminal intelligence bureau, told the Times. "He's going to be a person who can educate them to that."
American Muslims account for less than 1 percent of the department's nearly 10,000 officers, the Times said.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Muslims Pay Tribute to Jackson



CAIRO — Muslims across the world paid tribute on Saturday, June 27, to American pop superstar Michael Jackson, who died of an a cardiac arrest this week.
"It's hard to overestimate the impact Jackson had on the world in general, much less the Muslim world," Zahed Amanullah, associate editor of the London-based altmuslim.com, wrote in an article on his website.
"Like young people elsewhere around the world, many Muslims simply loved Michael, for his gentle persona, his raw talent, or the pop culture seed planted in their subconscious.
"Regardless of socio-cultural, generational, or linguistic backgrounds, Jackson's music was the secret soundtrack to our youth."


Jackson died Thursday, June 25, after apparently suffering a cardiac arrest at his rented mansion in Beverly Hills.
While Jackson ruled the charts and dazzled audiences with electric dance moves like the backwards "moonwalk" in the 1980s, his once-stellar career was overshadowed by his startling physical transformation and multiple allegations of child abuse.
The pop superstar lived as a virtual recluse following his 2005 acquittal on charges of child molestation and plotting to kidnap his young accuser.
Despite his acquittal, the trial was a body blow from which the pop music superstar struggled to recover.
"The passing of artist and performer Michael Jackson yesterday was quite a shock to many," Dawud Wharnsby Ali, a Canadian Muslim singer, wrote on his blog.
"My thoughts and prayers are with the Jackson family during this difficult time - and especially with Michael's young children."


Rumored Muslim
Muslims said that the pop superstar was an icon for millions of people around the world.

"Michael was an icon, a pain-filled, troubled icon, and like many of comparable stature before him, and inevitably many after him, his fall was sudden and unexpected," US Muslim Imam Zaid Shakir wrote on his website.
"Hopefully, his faith cushioned that fall.
"Hopefully, the tears he cried in the privacy of his oftentimes lonely world, tears described by Smokey Robinson as those of a clown, shed when no one’s around, had dried," Shakir said.
Rumors were swirling that Jackson has reverted to Islam.
This was intensified on Friday when Jackson's brother Jermaine, the family's official spokesman, prayed for Allah to have mercy on him.
"May Allah be with you, Michael, always," the brother said.
Many Muslims echo similar sentiments.
"His innovations as an entertainer with the best of his intentions – to bridge gaps between people and make people smile," Amanullah, the associate editor, said.
"That someone with his influence could have benefited – and benefited from – Islam is now an academic discussion that will be pondered for as long as Jackson's music lives on."



By IOL Staff

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Local Muslims warn France against straining relations


Ary Hermawan , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta Thu, 06/25/2009 11:09 AM Headlines
Indonesian Muslims say the burqa is not Islamic and is widely shunned in the country with the world's largest Muslim population, but warn France against straining Muslim-West relations should it push through legislation that could stigmatize those who wear it.
In what can be seen as another clash between Western liberal and Islamic sharia values, French President Nicholas Sarkozy has said the burqa is "not welcome" in France, branding it "a sign of subservience" that turns women into prisoners.
The burqa is an outer garment traditionally worn by some Muslim women, mostly in the Middle East, to cover their bodies from head to toe.
The French parliament on Tuesday formed a commission to study the wearing of the garment, considered conspicuous even in some Muslim countries, and may pass a regulation banning it from being worn in public in France.
Noted Islamic scholar Azyumardi Azra said the burqa was not common in Indonesia because Muslims here believed it went against the principles of modesty and propriety taught by the Prophet Muhammad and the Koran. "It could trigger resistance from society, not only in France but also in Muslim communities," he said.
Azra went on to lament Sarkozy's "derogatory" remarks on the burqa, which he claimed showed continued prejudice against Muslims, and suggested the French people might regard even the widely used jilbab in Indonesia a form of domestication.
Such remarks, he said, could inflame Muslim anger and disrupt efforts by US President Barack Obama to end hostilities between the West and the Muslim world.
"They should have talked with moderate Muslims there to campaign for an Islamic way of life that conforms to French values," he said.
While admitting that Muslims must be able to adapt to the society they live in, Azra said creating a regulation banning burqa would also be counterproductive and lead to more problems.
Indonesian Muslims are mostly moderate in their way of life and political views. The burqa is alien even to the more puritan Muslim groups in the country.
"Muslim clerics are at odds over the burqa," said Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI) spokesman Ismail Yusanto. "Hizbut Tahrir believes it is not compulsory for women to cover their faces."
Despite his view on the issue, he lashed out at France for applying double standards when dealing with Muslims.
"The French are so proud of the so-called Western values: libert*, *galit*, fraternit*. If they believe in freedom, where's the freedom for Muslims?" he said.
"Why should the state regulate how people should dress?"
Another Muslim activist, Siti Musdah Mulia of the Indonesian Conference on Religion and Peace, said France had the right to regulate burqa for administrative and security reasons.
"I don't see *the plan to ban burqa* as an infringement of religious freedom. I myself don't want my students to come to my class with their faces covered," she said.
In 2004, France, which has long abided by a principle of laicism, passed a law banning Muslim headscarves, Christian crosses and Jewish skullcaps at public schools.

Clinton names Muslim envoy, staff fail to announce it 2 days ago


WASHINGTON (AFP) — US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton this week named a new envoy to deal with the Muslim world but her communications staff failed to make the nomination public.
State Department spokesman Ian Kelly only released the information when journalists asked him during the daily media briefing about reports in India that a special representative for Muslim communities had been named.
"Yes," he said. "She's actually a friend of mine. I worked with her very closely in the European Bureau, Farah Pandith. She was a special adviser for outreach to Muslim communities in Europe. The secretary has appointed her to more of a global role."
But Kelly was vague after a reporter asked when the nomination was made by Clinton, who has considerably lightened her workload at the State Department since breaking her elbow last Wednesday.
"I believe it was made two days ago," the spokesman said, adding: "Yeah, it was either yesterday, or the day before."
Asked why it had not been made public, he said: "There was an announcement. I know it was sent out to the State Department community. But we will put it out more broadly."
When a journalist suggested the nomination might interest the broader Muslim community than just the State Department, he replied: "Fair point."
In his inauguration speech on January 20, President Barack Obama vowed to seek a "new way forward" with the Muslim world "based on mutual interest and respect," after eight rocky years under his predecessor George W. Bush.
Kelly promised to issue an official statement on Pandith's nomination.

The brutal crackdown on Iran’s streets

The brutal crackdown on Iran’s streets is starting to succeed. Last week millions joined in peaceful silent marches -- but lethal shooting, beatings and mass arrests have driven the protesters underground, where the internet and media blackout threatens to stop them communicating.[1] We can’t let that happen. Iran’s ruling clerical circles are in crisis talks right now -- even many senior conservatives are criticising militia violence and apparent election-rigging, and calling for rights of free assembly and open debate to be respected.[2] But with election inquiries and the security forces still tightly controlled by Ahmadinejad’s allies, hope hangs in the balance. Unless Iranians are able to share information freely and safely over the coming weeks, their voices may be silenced for good.Many websites are now blocked and the regime is monitoring ordinary internet and phone channels. So Iranians have started to rely on secure and anonymous proxy services to communicate -- but they’re shutting down due to overload, and running out of funds.[3]It’s clear how we can help: Let’s donate now to break the blackout and reopen vital channels of communication so that Iranians can share information and communicate freely during this vital period -- act now at this link:https://secure.avaaz.org/en/iran_break_the_blackoutOne small donation of €10 can fund enough bandwidth for Iranians to send hundreds of secure emails. If 5,000 or more of us can donate, we can scale up these services massively -- with more servers, bandwidth and advanced technical support.The next two weeks are crucial. As Iran’s secret policemen cast their net far and wide, secure channels of communication are also critical to avoiding the crackdown. Scores have been killed and hundreds of human rights advocates, journalists, bloggers and peaceful protesters imprisoned. Although many more remain free, without safe ways to communicate they will be isolated or hunted down. When the crackdown came in Tibet and Burma before, Avaaz members donated in our thousands to preserve the people’s basic human right to free communication and information. Overcoming censorship to make contact with each other and the world is crucial at these moments. Sharing information about the protests still flaring up around the provinces of Iran from Kurdish areas to the holy city of Qom, or uploading YouTube videos and first-hand reports of bravery and brutality to Iran’s million-plus weblogs and networks like Twitter, could make a huge difference.[4] If the regime believe they can silence such reports, the crackdown will only worsen.Legitimacy matters in Iran. From inspirational videos of million-strong marches to shocking evidence of militia violence, the truth will come out if Iranians can communicate freely with each other.[5] The clerical councils engaged in closed-door crisis talks are paying great attention to the voices being raised in their society. Let’s make sure Iran’s voices are not silenced – help break the blackout before it’s too late:https://secure.avaaz.org/en/iran_break_the_blackout

"On Faith,"

Below is an excerpt from "On Faith," an Internet feature sponsored by The Washington Post and Newsweek.

Each week, more than 50 figures from the world of faith engage in a conversation about an aspect of religion. This week's question: President Obama recently criticized a French law that prohibits Muslim girls and women from wearing body- and face-covering garments in public schools. "It is important for Western countries to avoid impeding Muslim citizens from practicing religion as they see fit," Obama said in Cairo, "for instance, by dictating what clothes a Muslim woman should wear."
But French President Nicolas Sarkozy this week gave his support to attempts to bar Muslim women from wearing veils such as the burqa. "The burqa is not a religious sign," Sarkozy said. "It is a sign of subservience, a sign of debasement. It will not be welcome on the territory of the French Republic."
What's your view? Is this a private religious matter or a public/government one? Is the burqa welcome in America?

In America, some women like to dress in provocative, flesh-baring clothes. Many feminists would say that this sartorial choice reflects low self-esteem and perpetuates an imbalance between the sexes. Yet we don't legislate against it. Fashion models, like the one to whom Mr. Sarkozy is married, pose in magazine spreads showing bodies that are inhumanly thin and inhumanly blemish-free -- and yet no one would legislate against scantily clothed fashion models on the basis that they debase womankind by holding up something completely unattainable as an example.
From the outside, all religious garb can appear eccentric, and deciding which religions are the worst offenders is not a game in which a democratic government should engage. Hasidic Jews dress in black suits and hats even in the hottest months of the summer. Some observers would say that this reflects a lack of common sense, a subverting of pragmatism in favor of ideology. Some Sikhs wear turbans, some Roman Catholic nuns wear habits, most devout Mormons wear sacred underwear. A secularist would say that all these choices reflect a triumph of religious hegemony over rationality, yet in a free country citizens are allowed to wear what they want.
-- Lisa Miller, senior editor, Newsweek
The United States has done very well in letting people wear clothing that reflects their religious commitment. Americans are used to seeing fellow Americans wearing yarmulkes or crosses or headscarves or turbans and even burqas. The more we become a religiously diverse nation, the more such clothing is appearing in public and the more Americans are becoming used to it.
Religious pluralism is just that -- a way for a society to cultivate acceptance of different faiths. The American Constitution shows the way. No religion is established (officially supported) over any other. Being a person of faith, or a person of no faith, is of absolutely no concern to your government. Leave it alone. We're doing fine. The burqa is as welcome in America as my cross or my clerical collar.
-- Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite, professor, Chicago Theological Seminary
To read the complete essays and more "On Faith" commentary, hosted by Jon Meacham and Sally Quinn, go to
http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith.

All is not lost

Those who claim to represent us have demonstrated time and time again that they do not have the moral backbone to lift us from this quagmire.
Indeed, the very ones at the centre of this controversy will depart these shores in the coming weeks for holidays, such is their concern.
In their wake they leave families torn and disgraced by a damning DES report.
However, there is a stirring among the
Ummah and calls for accountability and transparency are gaining momentum.
We will not return to the days of old and we except those who claim to represent us to live up to that calling or leave – we must accept nothing less.
It is for this reason that we have dedicated this newsletter to the issue of accountability.
We ask you to read the accounts herein with an open and sincere heart and may Allah bless you for your time.



Dear Reader
their lies about the Muslim community. And if truth be told and we seek someone to blame – then we need look no further than the mirror.
For it is we who have neglected the Sunnah, it is we who have placed our trust in individuals that did not and do not deserve it and it is we who have turned a blind eye to the ongoing abuses and failures. We only have ourselves to blame!
We sincerely wished that the release of this special newsletter would be occasioned by some good news and that we would be the harbinger of good tidings. It isn’t and sadly we aren’t – we bring bad news and a dire warning.
The last two weeks has witnessed a media onslaught directed at the North Dublin Muslim School. However, it has also afforded the hatemongers and Islamophobes in Irish society to spread



All is not lost
Those who claim to represent us have demonstrated time and time again that they do not have the moral backbone to lift us from this quagmire.
Indeed, the very ones at the centre of this controversy will depart these shores in the coming weeks for holidays, such is their concern.
In their wake they leave families torn and disgraced by a damning DES report.
However, there is a stirring among the
Ummah and calls for accountability and transparency are gaining momentum.
We will not return to the days of old and we except those who claim to represent us to live up to that calling or leave – we must accept nothing less.
It is for this reason that we have dedicated this newsletter to the issue of accountability.
We ask you to read the accounts herein with an open and sincere heart and may Allah bless you for your time.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

New Muslim Cool

New Muslim Cool,” a film by Jennifer Maytorena Taylor, is not a documentary about Muslim style, Muslim clubs or Muslim power cliques rising out of New York or Los Angeles as an emerging entertainment force. Aesthetically, the film, to be shown Tuesday as part of the “P.O.V.” series on PBS, has no investment in cool at all. Shot primarily in grim quarters of Pittsburgh, it chronicles the life of a young religious convert to quietly explore the porousness of cultural identity and the immense challenges presented to a man dramatically trying to reinvent himself in the face, essentially, of sanctioned prejudices.

Born to a Puerto Rican Roman Catholic family, Jason Pérez grew up fearing that he would be dead or imprisoned by the time he was 21. The concern was hardly irrational — he was a drug dealer. But then at 20, he found peace and answers in Islam, changing his first name to Hamza and dedicating himself to spirituality, music (Muslim-inspired hip-hop) and good works. The interviews he gave around some of his rap music, though, later come back to haunt him.
Divorced, he longs for the stability of married life because, as he explains, “in Islam we don’t have boyfriend and girlfriend.” Eventually, through an online Muslim social network, he meets Rafiah in Pittsburgh (“I liked the process,” she says of Internet dating, because it “eliminated anything, it eliminated any lust or attraction, where you get distracted and you don’t ask them important questions”) and starts a religious community to convert troubled young people to Islam. Things go well until the
F.B.I. raids his mosque.
“New Muslim Cool” possesses a kind of beauty that sneaks up on you: it is in Hamza’s humility, in the dignity with which he confronts so much of his misfortune, in his commitment to rehabilitating drug dealers because, in his mind, no one else will. Some of the most moving moments in the film take place during Hamza’s prison lectures. He is brought in to give faith-based talks at a Pittsburgh jail, but again, misperceptions about his past wind up scuttling his noble agenda.
Hamza approaches every human encounter as an opportunity to get closer to God; the film is an opportunity to access a closer view of human decency.
P.O.V.
New Muslim Cool

Iran: stop the crackdown

Today, the hearts and hopes of people around the world are with protesters facing awful risks on the streets of Iran. Regardless of who won the election, the question now is one of fundamental human rights.Top Iranian leaders are divided, so every bit of pressure matters. With massive new protests imminent, Iranian activists are urgently appealing for a united international response to oppose the violent crackdown.Sign the petition below calling on ALL governments to condemn the crackdown and withhold recognition of any Iranian government until election concerns are peacefully addressed. Then forward this email to friends and family -- let's build a massive global outcry of 1 million voices against the crackdown:http://www.avaaz.org/en/iran_stop_the_crackdown

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Unity is needed for Yes to Lisbon

Sunday, June 21, 2009 By Niamh Connolly, Political Correspondent The government has cleared the first hurdle to holding a second Lisbon Treaty referendum by securing legal guarantees and a protocol for Ireland to address voters’ concerns.However, its diplomatic success in Brussels must now be followed up with work on the ground to ensure that those voters who have a No stance will support the treaty if and when there is another vote.Recent RedC/Sunday Business Post opinion polls show a shift in voters by a margin of about two to one in support of the treaty in a second referendum.This is good news for a government still reeling from the local and European election backlash. But in such a volatile electoral climate, Taoiseach Brian Cowen can leave little to chance if he wants to avoid another humiliation in the autumn.

It’s worth bearing in mind that early polls before the last referendum also showed a majority in support of the treaty. But this lead was rapidly eroded by the Nos once the anti-Lisbon campaigns got under way.Given Fianna Fáil’s routing in the local and European elections, the fear on the Yes side is that voters will be tempted to deliver another crushing blow to the government ahead of the budget. The last Yes campaign was marked by political sniping and discord between Cowen and Fine Gael leader Enda Kenny about which party was doing the most campaign work on the ground.The combined forces of the No side, including the campaign by Libertas’ founder Declan Ganley and pro-life group Coir, proved too much to handle for a Yes side that was essentially divided.With Ganley pledging to bow out after his European election defeat, the major No voices now marshalling include new European MEP Joe Higgins, People Before Profit, Coir, Peace and Neutrality Alliance, Sinn Féin and the People’s Movement, which is headed by former Green Party MEP Patricia McKenna.The belief in Leinster House is that this time around, partisan politics must be set aside in the interests of a cohesive campaign under a Yes banner.However, Fine Gael leader Enda Kenny showed little inclination to test the theory of bipartisan politics last week when he returned to the source of the conflict between the parties in the last referendum debate.‘‘The timing of the last referendum left a lot to be desired when you had one taoiseach leaving and another one arriving. The government took their eye off the ball . . . the campaign was not co-ordinated,” said Kenny.Emboldened by his meeting with the European Commission president Jose¤ Manuel Barroso, Kenny announced he would lead the Yes campaign rather than risk the treaty falling foul of anti-government sentiment.This weekend, nobody on the government side has publicly taken issue with Kenny’s claim to lead the Yes campaign. Indeed, there was exaggerated relief expressed by some Fianna Fáil TDs that Kenny would ensure his party engaged more actively this time around.A Millward Brown report showed that 52 per cent of Fine Gael supporters voted in favour of the treaty, while the rate for Fianna Fáil supporters was 63 per cent.Some 61 per cent of Labour Party supporters voted against the treaty, as did 53 per cent of Green Party voters, and a massive 88 per cent of Sinn Fin supporters.Some sections of the Fine Gael party and its support base, including the larger farmers in the IFA, failed to actively support the Yes side.Even inside the parliamentary party, certain Fine Gael TDs privately saw the treaty last time ‘‘as an opportunity to give the government a kicking’’, one source said.‘‘They’ve had their pound of flesh now, so they can afford to take the statesman-like approach,” they said.But Kenny has also pointed out the dangers of the government leading a referendum campaign - namely its record unpopularity.‘‘There may be a political problem in separating the Lisbon referendum from the government’s mismanagement of the economy . . . The people want an election,” he warned last week.The extent of the public’s anger at the government may pose the biggest threat to the treaty being passed the second time around.This hostility is only likely to grow ahead of a difficult budget in December. Kenny has urged the government to set a date for the referendum early and move the referendum legislation in July, rather than attempt to recall the Dáil in September.Crucially, if Cowen is to attempt to get the public on board, he must try to put as much distance as possible between the referendum and the budget to come in December.Over the summer months, there will be rising concern about public sector cutbacks with An Bord Snip and the Commission on Taxation due to report back to government.In September, contentious legislation will be published to set up bad banks agency National Asset Management Agency (Nama), with the support of taxpayers’ billions of euros - an issue that may not help positive public opinion when it comes to the treaty.‘‘The government is already exceptionally unpopular, but in the national interest it will be incumbent on Fine Gael and Labour to set aside traditional differences with the government in the run-up to the campaign,” said Fine Gael senator Paschal Donohoe.Donohoe was appointed to chair a special sub-committee on Ireland’s future in Europe, set up by Cowen last autumn, to consider the reasons why the electorate voted No to the treaty last summer. ‘‘We have to approach this from the position that it is the current will of the people to say ‘No’. There has to be an insurgency campaign waged to convince people that the decision should be overturned,” Donohoe said.Yes campaign, Kenny was ‘‘opening up dialogue’’ within Fine Gael to get its support base on board with the treaty.Donohoe had little doubt that Cowen’s public comments questioning Fine Gael’s commitment in the last referendum had dissuaded Fine Gael voters from coming out on the Yes side.Cowen, during the campaign, remarked that an opinion poll showed Fianna Fáil was ‘‘the most pro-European party’’ and that support for the treaty was highest amongst Fianna Fáil voters.He encouraged other parties to ‘‘crank up their campaigns now as well’’.‘‘If you’re Enda Kenny trying to encourage Fine Gael voters to come out and vote for the treaty, and you have Brian Cowen saying we’re not doing enough . . . I’m certain it did dissuade Fine Gael people from coming out,” said Donohoe.” I would hope that lesson has been learned, because if it hasn’t, we’re in grave difficulty.It’s clear to me that the comments made during that campaign failed to incentivise the participants to do the best for their own parties,” he added.This time, Cowen will have to adopt more diplomatic tactics if he’s to get all the parties facing one direction. Latent anti-immigrant bias, linked to concerns over the displacement of Irish workers, also played a role in the treaty’s No result.A series of building blocks will also have to be put in place before the voters go to the polls for a second time on Lisbon, according to the Labour Party’s Joe Costello.Costello, who is Labour’s spokesman for European Affairs, said the government needs to take immediate action to deal with the 40 per cent of voters who expressed concern about workers’ rights in the Millward Brown Report.Three separate pieces of employment legislation need to go through the Oireachtas to address employee rights and concerns raised by the trade union movement before voters go to the polls again, he said.The Employment Law Compliance Bill must be passed to establish the National Employment Rights Authority (Nera) as a statutory body. The bill, which is to go the Seanad, will also strengthen the powers of Nera labour inspectors.The Agency Workers Directive, agreed by the European Commission last November, must be transposed into Irish law, Costello said. A crunch issue here is the collective bargaining rights. This directive met initial resistance from several member states, including Britain, Ireland and Poland.‘‘This directive was agreed last November and needs to be before the Oireachtas before October, he said. ‘‘Poland pulled back from opposing it, and Britain has also changed its mind, so that left us isolated.”‘‘We raised this with the Taoiseach last week, and he has agreed to ‘frontload’ that legislation,” he said.The final piece of the legislative jigsaw to appease trade unions’ concerns is to ring fence domestic legislation on workers’ rights to avoid any complications arising with the EU Directive on Posted Workers.The Directive on Posted Workers aims to guarantee minimum employment standards and protection for employees who are posted cross border within the European Union.However, in Sweden, a Latvian company, Laval, sparked major controversy by refusing to sign a Swedish industrial agreement for the construction work being undertaken in the country. ‘‘Sweden thought they had the best protections for workers, but they found themselves in difficulty on the Laval case because they were not operating from a statutory basis, but from an agreement between workers and employers,” said Costello.The Laval case was raised frequently by Siptu and Unite in the last referendum to justify its problems with the treaty. ‘‘We transposed this into Irish law in 2001, but only in a limited fashion,” said Costello.‘‘The only way to resolve this properly is to ensure that the legislation passed in each country is watertight,” he warned.There are concerns in the European trade union movement that the ‘solemn declaration’ on workers’ rights does not go far enough. European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) general secretary John Monks has outlined the same concerns he expressed last year, on legal judgments from the European Court of Justice.He said that individual Polish workers in Ireland are entitled to equal pay for equal work compared to Irish workers, but if they are posted to Ireland by an employer, the same protections do not necessarily apply.Nonetheless, the ETUC appears to be adopting a similar position to the first Lisbon Treaty, which is to broadly support the treaty while campaigning for social protocol to be attached on workers’ rights.Meanwhile, the trade unions in the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (Itch) will be formally discussing the implications of the ‘solemn declaration’ secured by the Taoiseach at a meeting with the ETUC general secretary in Dublin next month.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

French Muslim group opposes government

French Muslim group opposes government study that could lead to ban on full-body veils
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS – 16 hours ago
PARIS — A leading French Muslim group spoke out Saturday against a proposed parliamentary study that could lead to a ban on full-body veils, warning it could deepen social rifts and threaten civil liberties.
The French Council for the Muslim Religion urged President Nicolas Sarkozy to defend these liberties, which it said "form an integral part of the foundations of our nation."
Dozens of French legislators have proposed a parliamentary commission to study the small but growing trend of wearing burqas and niqabs, and consider banning the Islamic women's gowns in public.
A burqa is a full-body covering worn largely in Afghanistan with only a mesh screen over the eyes. More common in France - though still rare - is the niqab, a full-body veil, often in black, with slits for the eyes.
Government spokesman Luc Chatel expressed support Friday for an eventual ban, fueling questions about the place of Islamic garments in this country with a long and proud secular tradition.
The Muslim council's president, Mohammed Moussaoui, on Saturday voiced "firm opposition" to a parliamentary study of the full-body veils. He said only a "marginal" minority of Muslim women wear them.
"This subject risks yet again seriously stigmatizing Islam and Muslims in France," he said.
The issue is highly divisive even within the government. France's junior minister for human rights, Rama Yade, said she was open to a ban if it is aimed at protecting women forced to wear the burqa.
But Immigration Minister Eric Besson said a ban would only "create tensions."
In 2004, a law banning the Islamic headscarf and other conspicuous religious symbols from French public schools sparked intense debate. France has Western Europe's largest Muslim population, an estimated 5 million people.

Friday, June 19, 2009

SCHOOL BUS


SCHOOL BUS IN JAPAN








SCHOOL BUS IN some other countries!




Israeli Irishmen and women



GREEN NATIONALISM: Israeli Irishmen and women will next week host one of the leading experts on Irish nationalism at a lecture where he is expected to draw parallels between that movement and the Israeli experience. Tom Garvin, a professor of politics at University College Dublin, will be speaking at an event organized by the Israel Ireland Friendship League at Museum of the Jewish Diaspora in Tel Aviv on Tuesday at 7.30 P.M. "We've been trying to hold more events in association with institutions lately to expand our activity," said Malcolm Gafson, the League's chairman. He added that he hoped that the event - made possible by the support of The Embassy of Ireland and Cultural Division and the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs - could lay the groundwork for a future display on Irish Jewry at the heritage institution. The lecture will also be the Irish community's send-off for Ireland's ambassador, Michael Forbes, who will be leaving Israel this summer after completing a four-year stint. For more details write to iiflleague@yahoo.com or call 050-8221732. Have an idea about an item for Rank and File? E-mail us at column@haaretz.co.il.
Part of article by Cnaan Liphshiz

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Iran is on a knife-edge

Iran is on a knife-edge, with millions of voters taking to the streets in outrage as evidence mounts that the government may have massively rigged and stolen Thursday's election. The regime has cracked down brutally on the protesters and is imposing a blackout on Iranian society -- shutting down domestic and international media, the internet and even text-messaging. The voice of Iranians may have been silenced at the polling booth, now the regime is attempting to silence them everywhere else. Facing beatings and gunfire, the opposition is organising mass demonstrations and a general strike. We can’t afford to let the regime dismiss the voice of the people -- the truth must be heard. Avaaz is urgently organising a rigorous “exit poll” of Iranian voters and a media effort to publicise it -- working with an international polling firm to do a telephone survey of Iranian citizens to ask how they voted. We urgently need 20,000 Avaaz members to pitch in a small amount each to raise $200,000 in the next 24 hours and give Iranians a powerful new way to be heard -- follow this link to view video from the streets of Tehran and support this exit poll to find out the truth:https://secure.avaaz.org/en/iran_vote_truth/Public polling in Iran is heavily restricted, and no-one else is mobilizing fast enough to fund an international exit poll. It's urgent that we pitch in. A telephone poll won't be 100% accurate, but the difference between opposition and government claims is massive -- a rigorous poll can show which claim is remotely near the truth.Unlike Western organizations, Avaaz's global network has a strong membership in Iran and across the Middle East. Backed by a respected polling firm, our effort will be harder to dismiss by Iranian conservatives. We'll send the poll results to the media and help our members in Iran to rapidly and virally spread the news despite the regime's blackout. Messages have been flooding in from our Iranian members -- from Fariba: “20.000.000 people have lost their votes for peace and human rights. The government wants to use this votes for every thing but PEACE. Avaaz is a Persian word too and means voice -- hear our ‘avaaz’”. From Mahmoud: “The government has stolen the vote the people. The people in the street are beaten badly by the police. Now now now do not lose the time”. Stand with Iranians now and help their voices be heard:https://secure.avaaz.org/en/iran_vote_truth/

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Burnt out at the end of the academic year?

Stress-out with the recession? Burnt out at the end of the academic year? Need time to unwind after those horrible exams? Sick and tired of concrete jungle city and monotonous university life???? DO YOU WANT SOMETHING DIFFERENT AND REFRESHING??? MY Ireland has the solution...
A Time of Crisis or A Time of hope: Reviving the Islamic spirit
MY Ireland All-Ireland Summer Camp 2009
When? 26-29th June 2009
Where? Killarney, Co. Kerry
For who? Brothers & Sisters [Youth & Students (Secondary school & University)] [Note: strict segregation facilities will be maintained throughout the camp]
Cost? 50 Euro per person (Note: This only covers a fraction of the cost)
Camp Features? International speakers, workshops, sports activities, exhibitions etc
Contacts? Brothers Farrag 0851697730 & Moosa 0877744255, Sisters Fatima 0877530405 & Khaula 0877662452
Let all your friends know! Spread the word via mobile, telephone, email, word of mouth and
FACEBOOK! [Note: Click on this link to go to the Facebook link]

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Analyzing Obama's Speech to the Muslim World

The Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy (CSID) and the Project on Middle East Democracy (POMED) co-hosted a panel discussion on Thursday, June 4, 2009 entitled "Analyzing Obama's Speech to the Muslim World." The panelists were Geneive Abdo of The Century Foundation, Richard Eisendorf of Freedom House and Will Marshall, of the Progressive Policy Institute. Radwan Masmoudi, President of CSID, moderated the panel.Masmoudi expressed his apprehension that President Obama would not prominently feature democracy and human rights in his speech. He was pleasantly surprised, however, that democracy was among the speech's main themes. He noted that after twenty years of deterioration of US-Muslim relations due to mistrust, misunderstandings and a lack of information and knowledge on both sides, President Obama's speech set a new course. And while Obama's speech opened hearts and minds in the Muslim world, Masmoudi warned that people in the region would expect concrete, policy-based follow up to his words.Marshall labeled the speech as "masterful;" noting Obama' unique ability to delicately address complicated issues while simultaneously providing clear solutions in his speeches. As a corollary, he contrasted Bush's use of the imperative voice in communicating with the Muslim world with Obama's deft tone imbued with honesty and respect. He argued that this approach had a disarming effect to those who are inherently distrustful of the United States and burdens its detractors to justify their clichéd beliefs. While his overall assessment was positive, Marshall insisted on including three caveats to his praise. First, he worried that Obama's message of reconciliation conceded too much to the al-Qaeda narrative of victimization. Marshall argued that it was not Obama's role to reinforce Muslim feelings of identity politics; rather, it was his duty to debunk them. Second, he noted that the historical animosity between the US and the Muslim world would not change in one speech. He argued that Obama spoke to a tough-minded audience and that radicalism and extremism would not bend to rhetorical sweet-talking. In this vein insisted that values should guide US policy and that America should reap the consequences of such an endeavor. Third, he argued that for Obama's efforts to be seen as a departure from Bush-era policies ignores the real problem of fifty years of America's short-minded policies of allying with expedient allies against Communism and radical Islamism. This track record only reinforced his belief that the United States must align with ordinary people's aspirations against their governments and not step back from promoting democracy.Geneive Abdo characterized Obama's approach as "evasive" and devoid of any real policy prescriptions. And while he addressed buzzwords such as colonialism and occupation, she argued Obama's approach was not nearly expansive enough. She continued by noting how Obama's rhetorical brilliance raised expectation so high that Iran and al-Qaeda had preemptively issued statements responding to his speech. She continued by critiquing Obama's use of extremism as a foil in his speech. She argued that the debate was already well beyond this dichotomy and that Obama should have used his speech to address the political, economic and social reasons for extremism's regional constituency.She also noted the originality of using the affluence and freedom of America's Muslim community as an argument in the US's favor. She did not think this argument would be particularly persuasive given the divergence of circumstances among Muslims in the United States and the Middle East. On the War in Iraq, Abdo criticized the president for not apologizing for the invasion and not offering concrete plans for the country. She did admit, however, that he at least repudiated the Bush notion that Iraq was a war of necessity and not one of choice. Abdo also believed that Obama criticized the Palestinians far more than the Israelis in his speech, but did note how the president's tough rhetoric revealed a burgeoning rift between the US and Israel. In summation, she graded the presentation of his remarks highly but felt the substance of the speech was mediocre and that the conflict between the two sides was rooted in policy and not a lack of respect.Richard Eisendorf noted the choice of Cairo as the venue for the speech as the center of the Arab world and that the diversity of the crowd represented the full breadth of Egyptian public opinion. He then pointed to the loud applause during sections on democracy and human rights as evidence the crowd was not full of Mubarak loyalists. Acknowledging the concerns of his fellow panelists, he asserted that while policy follow up to the speech will be the most important element of his outreach to the Muslim world, the speech did leave a very strong feeling of respect in the way the United States under Obama intends to reach out to the Muslim world. He also pointed to the three D's the administration has heretofore considered the cornerstones of its foreign policy: diplomacy, development and defense. He argued that in the president's speech he appeared to add the fourth 'D' of democracy to the fold.Eisendorf also highlighted the shift Obama intended to make from Bush policies and how that would affect public opinion in the region. He specifically mentioned the straightforward manner in which Obama addressed the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. He also noted the significance of the president's use of the word 'Palestine' and other key buzzwords. In addition, he believed many in the region would find his rhetoric on this issue insufficient. As a final point, Eisendorf felt Obama finally established his doctrine of 'quiet diplomacy based on mutual respect.'In his summary statement, Masmoudi noted that while the tone of the speech was largely positive, it only represented the beginning of the administration's engagement with the Muslim world and that implementing the ideas of the speech would be a tremendous challenge. Meeting this challenge, he said, would require the concerted effort both by the domestic American reform constituency as well as positive steps by the Muslim world.

President Obama's speech

President Obama's speech to the Muslim world today was a stunning step toward achieving what has eluded the world for decades -- Middle East peace. His plan was honest and simple, with steps for all sides to take: end all settlement activity, renounce violence and build on existing Arab peace initiatives. But already obstructionists are doing all they can to derail Obama's historic efforts. We must act fast and publicly to encourage Obama to remain firm on illegal Israeli settlements and encourage the Palestinians and Arab states to outstretch their hands in peace. Only then is a new beginning for the Middle East possible. Sign the petition addressed to President Obama, and amidst the barrage of negative lobbying, advocacy and taped messages from extremists, our global campaign of hope and support will be delivered in print ads in strategically important papers in Washington and the Middle East next week. Read Obama's own words here and click now to add your name to the petition for peace: http://www.avaaz.org/en/obama_new_beginnings President Obama made clear that all parties must break clear from their entrenched positions and recognize that "the only resolution is for the aspirations of both sides to be met through two states, where Israelis and Palestinians each live in peace and security." Achieving this goal will not be easy. Before his speech radical groups released a series of messages demanding that Muslims reject Obama's overtures, while others in the region stuck to the same old, failed approach of letting their opponents move first. Meanwhile some in the US and Israel are pressuring the President to compromise on his rejection of settlement activity. A principled pathway is clear: all sides must accept each others' legitimate aspirations and remove the practical roadblocks to peace. Israelis must stop their settlements policy, accept the need for a viable Palestinian state and take steps to make this possible. Palestinians must adopt a unified, non-violent strategy for peace and state-building, and be prepared to recognize Israel; the Arab States need to build on their Peace Initiative, demonstrating ways to show Israelis that peace can be real. By signing the petition, and encouraging our friends and family to join us, we can all play a role in securing peace: http://www.avaaz.org/en/obama_new_beginnings

Think Ireland Drinks the Most Guinness? Think Again!



Think you know all there is to know about the Emerald Isle?
Your extensive knowledge will surely impress that lovely lass at the other end of the bar. Or at the very least, your friends.

Technically, It Is an Offense to Be Drunk in Public in Ireland
This has to be one of the least enforced laws in the history of any legal system. If the letter of the law were to be enforced in this area, half the county would have to be incarcerated every weekend -- but it is indeed true. Regulations introduced last year allow the police to issue on-the-spot fines for anyone caught being drunk in a public place in Ireland .
In reality, however, the police are generally pretty happy for you to
get as hammered as you want, as long as you aren't bothering anyone else, and aren't in any immediate danger of hurting yourself. So drink up! (But do it safely.)
An Irishman Founded the Argentinean Navy
William Brown, who was born in County Mayo , is acknowledged as the founder of the Argentine navy, and was also an important leader in the Argentine struggle for independence from Spain .
His family left for Philadelphia around 1786, when he was 9. He started off seafaring as a cabin boy, and ended up fighting in the Napoleonic wars, where he was captured as a prisoner of war. Then he escaped the Germans, before eventually ending up Montevideo , Uruguay , where he became a sea trader, and later ended up founding the Argentine navy, which was involved in a war against Spain .
Today there is a statue of Brown in his hometown of Foxford, Co. Mayo, which was unveiled in 2007, the 150th anniversary of his death; in Argentina, where he is regarded as a hero, there are two towns, around 1,000 streets and 500 statues, a city and a few football clubs, named after him.
Only 2 Members of U2 Were Born in Ireland
David Howell Evans, more commonly known as The Edge, was born in London , to Welsh parents, Garvin and Gwenda Evans, who moved to Malahide in Dublin when The Edge was one year old. Adam Clayton, U2's bassist, was born in Oxfordshire , England . His family moved to Malahide in Dublin when he was five, and he became childhood friends with The Edge. Only
Bono and Larry Mullen Jr. were actually born in Dublin .
The Street on Which You Will Find the British Embassy in Tehran Is Named After an Irishman
The street on which you will find the British Embassy in Tehran is named after an Irishman.
In 1981, the death of Bobby Sands, the leader of the IRA hunger strikers, brought the world's attention on the seemingly intractable conflict in Northern Ireland . Two years before, the Iranian revolution brought the Ayatollah Khomeini into power in Iran . Presumably to annoy the British government , or perhaps as a token of solidarity with the hunger strikers (depending on your perspective), the Iranian government changed the street on which the British Embassy is located, from "Churchill Boulevard" (after the British prime minister) to "Bobby Sands Street." Pedram Moallemian, an Iranian student who was involved in renaming the street, wrote, "The larger victory, however, was when we discovered the embassy had been forced to change their mailing address and all their printed material to reflect a side door address in order to avoid using Bobby's name anywhere."
Up Until Around the Early 1990s, Ireland Had a Low Per Capita Consumption of Alcohol
Obviously whenever the word "Irish" comes up, "drinking" is never far behind. And it is true that today,
Ireland's alcohol consumption, which has fallen in recent years, is still very high by international standards.
A survey in 2006, for example, found that the Irish spend a higher proportion of their income than any other country in Europe, and also found that the Irish were the worst binge drinkers in Europe . So the recent evidence certainly supports the old Irish drunkard stereotype. But prior to Ireland becoming a wealthy country, its alcohol consumption per population was actually quite moderate: throughout the 20th century in Ireland , there was a high level of alcohol abstinence, as this is a trait more commonly associated with Protestant countries.
But as the Catholic Church saw its moral authority decline toward the end of the 20th century, and as the country became wealthier, the Irish came to drink a lot more -- finally earning themselves the stereotype that has been fixed to them for so long. One likely reason the Irish had earned themselves this stereotype of being heavy drinkers was because of their immigrants: no doubt to drown out the pain of being dislocated from their home country, Irish immigrants in the U.K. and the U.S. tended to be big drinkers.
A Hospital in Belfast Is a World Leader in Kneecap Reconstruction
God knows, there have been many a kneecap that has had to have been reconstructed in Northern Ireland over the last few decades. (Shooting people in the kneecaps was a favored way for Republican and loyalist paramilitaries to control their own neighborhoods.) During the Troubles, the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast had one of the top trauma units in Europe . At one point as many as 100 victims of "limb executions" were being treated by the hospital every year, whose advances included external "limb scaffolding" that enables partial healing for bone damage too severe for reconstruction.
Ireland Has the Fourth Largest Stadium in Europe
Dublin's Croke Park, the headquarters of the Gaelic Athletic Association, is the fourth largest stadium in Europe: since its redevelopment in 2005, and with a capacity of 82,300, only four venues in Europe are bigger: Barcelona's Camp Nou, Madrid's Santiago Bernabeu, Milan's Stadio San Siro and London's Wembley. Up until 2007, rugby and soccer were not allowed to be played in Croke park by the GAA, a rule that was relaxed when the main soccer and rugby stadium, Landsdown Road , was closed for renovation.
In the Summer of 2007, It Rained in Ireland for 40 Days Straight
Even by Irish standards, this was a very, very wet summer. By August 24, it had rained in Ireland for 40 days -- fulfilling an Irish proverb that says if it should rain on St. Swithin's day (July 15), it will continue to rain every day for the next 40. Usually, an Irish summer will give at least a few weeks of sunshine and a break from the rain -- at which time the feel good factor in the country goes sky high, for the sheer novelty value of sunshine. But not so, the summer of '07.
Playboy Was Banned in Ireland Until 1995
That's right -- in 1995 although you could get Playboy TV, you couldn't get the magazine, which was banned under the country's censorship laws.
More Guinness Is Sold in Nigeria Than in Ireland
That's right: Ireland is the third largest market for Guinness. Nigeria is at second, and the U.K. is the first.